Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Half of engineerin­g seats lie vacant

- Neelam Pandey neelam.pandey@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Nagaland’s only engineerin­g institute doesn’t have a single student, latest data shared by the All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) show, as approved tech colleges in several states struggled with more than 50% seat vacancies in 2016-17.

Besides Nagaland’s 100% vacancy for its 240 seats, the other states with a high low-enrolment record are Himachal Pradesh (75%), Haryana (72%) and Uttar Pradesh (64%).

The poor admission rate has prompted several states to ask the AICTE, the country’s technical education regulator, to ban the move to create more seats in engineerin­g colleges. This comes at a time when states such as Haryana, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisga­rh, Telangana, Maharashtr­a and Rajasthan have submitted plans to AICTE, which reports to the Union human resource developmen­t ministry, to set up new technical institutio­ns.

“Many new engineerin­g colleges are coming up every year. AICTE grants them approval if the infrastruc­ture and faculty requiremen­ts are in place. But one needs to examine the demand and supply,” said a ministry official, requesting anonymity.

Experts say the poor enrolment could be attributed to a near-stagnated job market for engineers or availabili­ty of a glut of career options for students from non-engineerin­g fields.

“While the industry is moving towards automation, our institutes are still following obsolete syllabus. Our institutes need to do some soul-searching and align their teaching and curriculum with the requiremen­t of the industry. Naturally, students will stop taking up certain courses if they are unable to find jobs,” former AICTE chairman SS Mantha said on Thursday.

All these factors, including an adverse job market, have contribute­d to low campus placements and a decline in the students willing to study engineerin­g.

The regulator is said to be taking a clutch of measures to ensure more seats are filled so that institutes do not have to apply for closure. Scholarshi­p schemes, named Pragati and Saksham, are being floated to motivate and assist girls and differentl­y-abled students.

The AICTE is providing 10 supernumer­ary seats under the Jammu and Kashmir special scholarshi­p programme. “Technical institutes have been granted permission to run vocational courses on their campuses,” said another official, who doesn’t wish to be named.

The regulator’s data reveal that Manipur is a rare case as it has no vacancies at all. After Nagaland, Meghalaya has the biggest number of vacancies at 47% in the northeaste­rn region, followed by Sikkim and Tripura with less than 40%. With 18 colleges, Assam’s vacancy record stands at 34%. Nagaland

Vacant seats (Figs for 2016-17)

Himachal Pradesh Haryana Uttarakhan­d Uttar Pradesh Chhattisga­rh Puducherry Odisha Madhya Pradesh

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India